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Candles by Lisa

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Posts posted by Candles by Lisa

  1. Polythene and polypropylene are two different plastics. Polythene is used in plastic shopping bags (although does come in various thicknesses though).

    Polypropylene is clearer (polythene can be quite opaque), and it has that sort of a crinkly gift wrap feel and sound to it (polythene bags are softer more like what are used in hospital for transporting blood samples). It doesn't leech the smell out of the candle as much as polythene does. I stored some candles in a polythene bag waiting for my new supply of cello bags to arrive. They didn't smell nearly as strong coming out of the polythene bag as they did going in.

    HTH.

    Lisa

  2. Hi Vicky,

    Do you melt the wax directly on the heat? I use the double boiler (which I agree makes one god almighty mess).

    And Yvette I might just head down to the charity shops and see what I get. I know you can't control the heat but I suppose you can't control the heat when you are making them on the cooker either!

    Cheers

    Lisa

    :)

  3. Yep they are plug in was thinking of getting an adapter for one but then got to thinking would a slow cooker not work similar to the double boiler method. Just want something that will melt more wax so I can pour more than a pound or 2 of wax.

    And yes if someone in the UK could supply them yippeeeeeee!!!!!!!

    Cheers

    Lisa

    ;)

  4. I have been searching and searching for Presto Pot in the UK but can't see anything like it. Need to get something bigger than a double boiler but don't want to spend hundres on melters.

    Does anyone know of anything similar to a Presto Pot in the UK. Can a slow cooker be used?

    A very confused Lisa

    :confused:

  5. I did something really silly too not so long ago. I had washed out a whole load of polycarbonate moulds, dried them and I put them in the oven to get ride of any left over wax. Put them in at 50, left them, forgot about them, went to make the dinner turned the over up to 180 and only remembered the moulds where still in them when I smelled the burning plastic.

    I had a round mould in there and honestly when I took them out they looked like a couple of silicone breast implants!! The pillars just turned into blobs - needless to say I haven't done that again.

    And good luck with the estate agents.

    Lisa

    :mad:

  6. Is it so hard to address someone by their user name? I don't see anyone using the name "Yvette" for their user name within this thread anywhere.

    My user name is Cabin Creek Candles. I wouldn't want you to address me by my real name just because we may have conversed a few times via pm and you think by doing so we are now friends. That's absurd!

    Hi Cabin Creek,

    Very sorry if I have offended you. I thought this was a public forum so as a member of the public I have the right to call a person by their name if I so choose as other people have the right to call me by my name if they choose. If the person is unhappy with me using their name they can tell me not someone with too much time on their hands to nit pick!!!

  7. I've pretty much given up the ghost and just push the wick in as far as it goes so the votive stands level. Nobody has complained so far - but that's not surprising when you go and have a look at the bottom of a votive you can buy in the shop (it is like the surface of the moon - full of craters and bumps) we are definately too hard on ourselves.

    Lisa

  8. I have to agree with that. I work full time but I have to admit that my candle making takes up almost every spare minute of my time. It is like an addiction though, you must have this fragrance or that fragrance and don't get me started on the molds.

    If you can pull in the reins (which I unfortunately cannot do:laugh2: ) you will save a lot of money.

    Lisa

  9. It depends on your formula but you can use that as a rough guide.

    Before lighting the candle, use a scale to weigh it and find

    it's total weight. Then light and let burn for 3 hours (assuming

    it's a 3 inch diameter candle). Weigh the candle again. Now

    you can calculate the burn rate. i.e, if you have a 16

    oz candle to begin with, and after 3 hours of burning it weighs

    15.5 oz, then that means that .5 oz burned in 3 hours. Divide that

    by 3, so in 1 hour .16 oz burned away. Now take your original

    total weight and divide that by your per hour burn rate.

    This would give you a total burn time of approximately 100

    hours.

    Hope this helps.

    Lisa

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